Danny Boyle

Wednesday, December 31, 2008 at 8:42 pm

Danny Boyle joins the ranks among the more versatile directors from the British film industry - another example being Michael Winterbottom. I met him very briefly during a Q&A session at the 2007 Los Angeles Film Festival when he was promoting his space thriller Sunshine. To be honest, I wasn't a fan of him then. I've seen 28 Days Later ... and The Beach as well as Sunshine, and of course I've heard of his earlier works Trainspotting and Shallow Grave, but while I did like Sunshine I thought his previous works were too edgy for my taste. I did start paying attention since last year, and now having watch Slumdog Millionaire he has definitely entered my list of directors I admire.


One thing though - he has very simple philosophies, and tends to repeat the same viewpoints at every interview. Most prominent is his belief that 'your first film is the best one', which is his reasoning for why he keeps switching genres - he said that last year during the Q&A session and now he mentions it at virtually every interview he's given in the last few weeks. As such, the following long-ish interview is all you need to read to get into the mind of Danny Boyle.



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Interviewed by Tasha Robinson
November 26th, 2008

British director Danny Boyle never makes calm films. He's tried a lot of things, working in genres from horror to science fiction to fantasy to thrillers to straight dramas, albeit ones with a fantastical or surreal edge. But his films—TrainspottingThe Beach28 Days LaterMillions, and more—all share an edgy, nervous, feverishly intense quality that makes them stand out. Boyle's latest, the energetic fable Slumdog Millionaire, continues the trend. It adapts Vikas Swarup's bestseller Q&A to tell the story of a 18-year-old Mumbai orphan on the brink of winning millions of rupees in India's version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?—a situation that makes the show's producers and the local police rightly suspicious. The film is essentially a fairy tale, set firmly in modern Indian, with a tinge of modern Bollywood. Shortly before the film opened, Boyle spoke with The A.V. Club about…

The A.V. Club: You co-directed Slumdog Millionaire with Loveleen Tandan, who's cast and crewed films in India, but never directed before. How did that come about?

Danny Boyle: I did five months with her beforehand, casting. It's quite a big cast, in terms of regular people, and then there's all the kids, and they have to connect with each other and make sense as growing people. So we were working together every day, pretty intensely. And the film began to be influenced by her. I could feel that—you just do—because obviously I began to talk to her about stuff that initially people probably wouldn't tell you about, stuff that she didn't think was accurate. So it became clear to me that I needed to carry that into the film with me. Not just because the little kids weren't very good at English, they were really only Hindi speakers, not just for translation reasons, but because she was beginning to influence the film.

She wants to be a director herself. It's very difficult there, I think, to start off directing, particularly as a woman. Eventually, I sent her out on a second unit, because the stuff that was coming back out of second unit wasn't very good. It needed a director there. And she did some lovely stuff with them, brought back some lovely stuff, so it felt only right to call her the co-director really, and hope that will give her a leg up in her career. There were a couple of other people as well who I couldn't credit as much as her, for technical reasons. There was the first assistant director, this guy Raj Acharya, and also the live sound guy, Resul Pookutty. They again were like Loveleen, they had a major influence on me. It would have been a quarter of a film, really, without their influence.

AVC: Was there any question about whether to film it in India, instead of on a soundstage, or locally?

DB: We went there, and the production company that was helping us do it, India Take One, most of the films they make are Bollywood films. They know what India—especially Mumbai—is like to film in. They were trying to influence me to shoot in the studios the whole time. It felt to me like the flavor of the film—the city was a character, obviously. It's a bit of a cliché to say it, but it's true. It really felt like it was. It would be like if you did a film about New York, and you did it all in a studio. There would be something apathetic about it, which might be the effect that you were after. But if you wanted a kind of realism, something that felt real and was being told from the point of view of a kid, you've got to film it in the real places. Also, just as a director, it's only by doing that you get any chance, as a Westerner, of actually being able to represent life truthfully. I couldn't fake it in a studio because I don't really know what India is like, so it just makes so much sense to do it where it belongs. It's a street film, really. It's about a kid from the streets, and so you've got to make it in the streets.

AVC: What's it like going from something that's so interior and claustrophobic and set-bound, like Sunshine, to something that's based on being outdoors among huge crowds of people?

DB: Incredibly liberating! [Laughs.] As you can probably tell from watching the film, I just went mad for it, really. I'm sure it was partly the release from coming out of a studio environment. I found it completely liberating and enjoyable. Not everybody did. We took about 10 crew members fromSunshine, and I would say three or four of them really didn't enjoy being there, but I loved it, and they had to drag me away at the end. They had to drag me back to England to edit it. [Laughs.] I loved it, and I'm sure some of it was the contrast to Sunshine. But a lot of it is also that if you approach India in the right way, you have so much to learn there about people, and there's so many people. It's such an extraordinary setup, and it's so bewildering how it manages to get through somehow, you can only wonder at it. I loved it. I don't want to say I fell in love with it, but it obviously was a bit like that.

AVC: How much of what we see in the film is a real, raw India, vs. built sets or compositing?

DB: Oh no, no special effects or compositing.

AVC: The gigantic tin-roof slum looked created. It's a real place?

DB: Oh yeah. [Laughs.] Dharavi is a lot bigger than that. It's supposed to be the biggest slum in the world, with about two million people in it. We didn't do much CG. Most of it was the kids chasing the train, that was dangerous with kids, so we had them on wires in case anything happened, so most of our special-effects budget went to removing the wires. The Taj Mahal was CG, because they won't light up the Taj at night. So you have to photograph it in the daytime, and the computer turns it into a night shot, and then you film a night scene and you put the Taj out there—the CG and the Taj and the darkness, as though they're doing the opera near the Taj. So that was a CG creation, but virtually all of it is real, and I wanted that, you know. I had just made a film that had been quite CG. I tried to make Sunshine with as little CG as possible, but there's still a quite a substantial amount of it.

AVC: Were there places it was difficult to get permission to film?

DB: There's lots of things that can be solved with cash. [Snickers.] And there's occasional things that can't be solved with cash, which become a bureaucratic nightmare for some reason, and there's no distinction between the two. There's no way of reading a situation and saying, "Yes, that'll be a bureaucratic nightmare, but that one we'll be able to buy off." It just depends on the day, apparently. The most extraordinary thing, you'd be given permission for, and then the weirdest, simplest things, you just wouldn't be able to obtain permissions. And it would go on and on and on forever and ever, and there was no way to know. You have to kind of approach it with an open, quite optimistic mind, no matter what's thrown at you, because it will only ever result in damaging the film if you let any kind of despondency get to you. You have to remain optimistic, and that's clearly how people live their lives there. Against all the odds, they retain kind of a spirit which allows them to get through against insufferable odds. The poverty, the traffic, the lack of infrastructure, the flooding during the monsoons—there's just so many things that are coming at you at the whole time that your spirit has to remain, and that's certainly true. It enters the minutia of filming.

AVC: What kind of weird, simple thing could you not get permission for?

DB: We wanted to do an aerial shot, very simple from a helicopter. I think the guy at India Take One thought, "They're cool. No problem. We'll just ask the right guy, and that'll be fine." But in fact we came across the guy and he made us go through the whole administrative process, which meant we weren't allowed to take up—no Westerners were allowed in the helicopter, and it would have to be an Indian cameraman. So we nominated our second-unit cameraman, who was a native Indian, and we duly applied for permission. This started about 18 months ago. We applied for permission, and I kept asking every couple of months about it, and it was making its way through gradually. It was in Delhi, and then it was somewhere else. Two or three weeks before the Toronto Film Festival, we finally got permission to shoot from the sky in India. You just politely nod. Obviously, the film was locked by then, so it was no good to us. India Take One, which had applied for it, was happy, because they'll sell their permission to someone else, through another film crew who won't need to wait 18 months to get permission.

And we already, of course, had been up in a helicopter with a cameraman. I had already taken up this still camera which shoots about 11 frames per second, because it just looked like I was a tourist going up there taking a photograph. And then we used that. So there's always ways around these blocks, but you just have to remain optimistic the whole time. Otherwise, it just crushes you.

AVC: You portray the police in Mumbai as corrupt and violent, using torture pretty casually. Was there any script oversight from the Indian government? Were things like that a problem?

DB: Yes, there is significant script oversight. You're made to submit everything that you shoot to the Indian government before you shoot it, and once you've shot it, before the film is ever seen in any capacity, it has to be censored by the Indian government. And if you try and smuggle film out, it will be confiscated at the borders and will probably spend many, many months being vetted, so it's pretty emphatic. Of course, the truth is, it doesn't quite work like that, like everything in India.

For instance, the police-station scene you're referring to, we had to submit that, because it involved a police station, and we needed to get in and see police stations. We were expecting, as you were probably hinting—you'd think that it'd be trouble there. So they sent back a written response saying that the scene was fine, but it was very important that no one involved in the torture be above the rank of inspector. And that was it. And that tells you everything you needed to know, that it goes on all the time, and they're just protecting the big guys from any involvement. We went around the police stations, and you can see the equipment. It's not hidden away. [Laughing.] It's right there in the corners, you know, these different bits of equipment.

And you talk to the local people on the crew, they'll say, "Yeah, if you're from a certain class, and you are arrested for anything other than a traffic offense, you've got a chance you're going to get knocked about a bit." The scene, the way I directed it, it's slightly comic, but of course it's resonant in the West, at the moment especially. In America, nobody laughs. It's taken very, very seriously, as though I'm trying to make a point about torturing, whereas, in fact, it was a reaction, like everything in the film, to India and what goes on there. I thought it was a comic scene, really, in a way. If you look at it carefully, it is played as a comic scene. The actors were supposed to play it like that. One says, "What have you been doing all night?" and the other says, "You know, just giving him some electricity. That'll loosen his tongue." It's played in a slightly comic level, but it screeches in silence [in America.] Understandably, of course, but it is screeching in silence.

AVC: Do you have to worry as a director how things will play in different countries, based on politics and the current situation?

DB: No. You worry about everything, but you can't over-worry about stuff like that, because the film was meant to be from the perspective of these kids; shot as a subjective experience. You take a limited amount of money for it, and it doesn't have to answer some of the questions you're suggesting on how Western audiences will view it. It's protected in that it's made quite frugally, so we can tell it the way we want to tell it: truthfully. Each of the scenes feel truthful in the way we made them. Certainly the perspective on poverty is interesting and a mental challenge. You go in with your inbuilt morality and you're very shocked and concerned and horrified by seeing children who have been maimed to make them better beggars. Their lives have been dictated by that. But from their perspective, your chance of changing that is nonexistent. You have to see it internally, from their perspective. Their view on destiny is keen. It's very hard to get your head around.

For us, destiny always feels… if you obey, it's almost a passive thing. I didn't think that was admirable, but when you get there and see the way it works and the connection that's there between people, it's not just about the destiny of someone who has been crippled like that, but it's also about someone who has benefited from destiny and goodwill. Like [Slumdog co-star Anil] Kapoor, he's a big star, and he feels connected to that guy in a way that we don't really do anymore. He feels a connection because of the role of destiny. It's very complex, and if there was a perspective, that's what I would go for. Not the Western perspective of "Is there anything we can do to change these people's lives?" That didn't feel an appropriate way of approaching it.

AVC: You make a lot of films about lower-class people fighting to get into the upper class. What is it about that theme that draws you, and how does that fit in here?

DB: Well, the lead character, his destiny is ambitious, really. It's about the girl, and he just uses the show and the cash that's on offer. He's not really that interested in it, he's just using it as a tool to try and get back to what he sees as the love of his life. His feeling of destiny leaves him liberated and able to contradict what is apparently the life that is set out for both him and the girl. I'm drawn to the underdog story, I guess, because I come from quite a simple background, and I've come into a business where a person with my background wouldn't normally appear. I guess there is some of that in it, and that draws you to that kind of story. It's partial though, it's not really a crusade. It just seduces you when you read a story and your brain relates to it. You recognize or connect with it. You identify with it; you're bound to.

AVC: In one interview, you talked about the vibrancy of the East, and how we have insulated ourselves from realism in the West. Do you have a theory about why that's the case?

DB: I think it's not so much East-West; I noticed it because Simon [Beaufoy, Slumdog Millionaire's screenwriter] said that the way it was written felt Dickensian. One of Dickens' biggest influences was the growth of London as a Victorian city, and the extremes being created as it expanded. The poverty and enormous wealth—it felt like a city in fast-forward, and that's what Mumbai felt like when I was working there. The extremes are available, and you can still tell melodramatic stories, and they feel realistic. In the West, those extremities, which we still want to see, are placed in fantasy movies. I'm sure that's one of the reasons superheroes and fantasy have become so dominant in the last 10 or 15 years, culturally. The more realistic stories tend to be gentler and softer-edged. Not so extreme in the sense of melodrama. You can exploit it, as a storyteller, for quite extreme subject matter. People say about Slumdog, "Did you imagine that the horrific scene of a kid being blinded and the happy dancing scene would blend together?" You don't think like that. You imagine they will go together because they both feel realistic in that city. You imagine they will gel, and you don't realize the contrast until afterward, when you try to analyze it in interviews.

AVC: What was it like putting the soundtrack together?DB: Oh, I love the soundtrack, absolutely adore it. It was fantastic, it was very simple. It was just a case of getting this guy, A.R. Rahman, to do it. He's the most famous composer in India. He really is absolutely brilliant at his work. All I said to him was "Just use what's around at the moment, because it is extraordinary there at the moment." They make a thousand films a year, and songs are really important in their films, so he has a huge experience and knowledge and gift for writing songs for films. I like working with songs anyway. I tend to score with songs from Western pop music. So that suits me anyway. But India has this huge tradition, ultra-classical, the sitar and all that. Modern classical Bollywood songs are very string-influenced, with almost hysterical strings. But you've also got hip-hop and R&B coming in from America, a massive influx of that, and from Europe, you've got disco, house music. And it's all fusing together in their music. That's what the Slumdog soundtrack is full of, that kind of fusion. I said, "Just go with that, and don't make it smooth. I don't want the film to feel smooth. I want it to feel jagged, contrary. The things that are captured are clashing with each other," because that's what the city's like, it's a mass of different impulses all the time. Anyway that's how I briefed him, and that was it, really. He doesn't need much help, I'll tell you that. He can really do it. So I'm very pleased with that. It should be up on iTunes.

AVC: That sort of jagged quality is common to your films in general—the soundtrack to Trainspotting, the visuals in Millions, the movement in 28 Days Later. Is there something about that texture that specifically appeals to you?

DB: Originally I'm a big pop-music aficionado, that's my love. Everybody does it now, because everybody has got playlists now, but I used to have playlists for years. I would make my own playlists. I love that sense of change that you'd get in pop music every three minutes, every four minutes. I like that jaggedness very, very much. I love the way movies move forward all the time, they just keep in motion, not just action movies, although they're the ultimate example of it. There's a forward momentum in them, which is completely life-affirming, always. It's really weird. People say you never remember anybody who dies in movies, and it's true, you don't. You don't even remember people who disappear. Although the moment that it happens might be terribly sad and moving, five minutes later, if you're asked to remember that person, you go, "Oh right, yeah, yeah!" 'Cause you're just moving forward. It's really bizarre. And anybody who messes with that, it's really interesting. That's why films like Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless Mind and Memento are such interesting films—because they mess with that. They turn it and run it backward. I like that, because we're so into the forward momentum of films. Even films that are dealing with flashbacks still feel like they're moving forward all the time. That quality of change, of motion, I love that. Movement involves change, so I always try to bring that to films if I can. You're not always successful with it, but a situation like Mumbai just is ideal for that. It's kind of like New York in the '80s, everything coming at you, there's stories coming at you all the time. You'd be a fool to make something really dull there. [Laughs.]

AVC: That inexorable forward movement does tend to be a theme in the films you direct—the characters tend to get caught up in situations beyond their control, and while they have choices to make, free will takes a back seat to the circumstances around them.

DB: Yeah, I think that's certainly true. I like to put people in as extreme circumstances as possible, and just see what happens to them as people. You don't think of what links all these films together, because you can't, really. Other people do that—journalists, obviously critics. But you don't spend that much time thinking about it yourself.

AVC: When we last talked to you back in 2005, you were planning Sunshine, and we talked about your poor-people-trying-to-get-out-from-under themes, and whereSunshine fit into your filmography. You said you wouldn't know what the themes were until you made the film. Did you ever figure them out? Or is that something else you don't tend to think about?

DB: The be-all and end-all of movies like that, really, is that you're making your small contribution to space movies. You cannot escape the canon—it just surrounds you every moment that you're making the film. It's extraordinary, really. You try to be original within the genre, but it's very difficult. You learn that very quickly. It's a very narrow place you're working. The landscape is focused. The corridor really is minute. You're thrashing around trying to manipulate the ingredients into an original format. Having said that, I really, really enjoyed the film. How it turns out is sort of difficult. You watch them so often. Everybody expects you to be qualified to talk about your films, but in a way, you're the least qualified person to talk about them. When you're finished, you don't watch them at all. A couple of weeks ago, I was watching a bit of Sunshine over my daughter's back—she had a couple of mates around and they were watching it, and I saw some of it from behind her. [Laughs.] It was really funny—I thought, "Oh, it's quite good, that." But it's weird, the relationship you have with your films. I can't explain it. You should be the perfect spokesperson for them, but you're absolutely not. I could sit down with you and talk to you about it, but it would be a completely distorted experience, because my memories are to do with the horrors of filming it, what I wanted to do and what I ended up doing, and all the things you regret that you never quite managed to do. But I enjoyed the film very much, and I think the poetic idea of the film, of reaching out to a star, I love that, the ambition of that. Because it's ridiculous, obviously. Only a movie would allow you to do that. Or a song. You could write a song like that as well.

AVC: When you sit down to make a genre movie, do you watch other things in the canon, to see what's been done and what you have to avoid?

DB: Yeah, for sure. One of the biggest impulses is, you want to work, if you can, in an area that you haven't worked in before, because you start from zero. That's the best place to start from, always—knowing as little as possible, and then building up your knowledge. The reason I say that is that I have this theory, which is more provocative than reasonable or fully thought through: Your first film is always your best film, in a way. There's something about your first film that you never ever get back to, but you should always try. It's that slight sense of not knowing what you're doing, because the technical skills you learn—especially if you have a film that works, that has some kind of success—are beguiling. The temptation is to use them again, and they're not necessarily good storytelling techniques.

Good storytelling for me is not so much technical expertise, which I know is applauded often; it's actually freshness of approach. Now, it does mean you sometimes stumble and fall and make a horrible mess of things in seeking that freshness, but you should always keep trying to do that. You get lots of young filmmakers coming up, or people who want to be filmmakers, saying "Would you give any advice?" and things like that. The only advice I give is, "If you do get a chance to do it, take risks, because there's no point otherwise. Cinema will die otherwise." There has to be a reason why you go to that room, with those people, and watch 40-foot-high versions of ourselves. And it's not just to see a mirror. It's not to see minute behavior. I think it's to watch the extremes of what you're capable of, often. And storytelling, the freshness of storytelling, is a wonderful combination of extremes for me. So I'm always after putting people in extreme circumstances. I'm always after not knowing what I'm doing in those extreme circumstances.

AVC: So do you have tricks to force yourself out of the comfort zone, to keep yourself from using the same technical methods?

DB: Well, the main ingredient is trying to work in a world where you haven't been before, that you don't know the rules of. And that involves a lot of research, so you begin to see where the other people have been, but you are starting from as vulnerable and as low a point as possible.

AVC: We're hearing news again about how aTrainspotting sequel might be moving forward. What's the latest with that?

DB: Ah, well, yeah. That's just waiting for them [the cast] to grow older. What's happening is, we got this idea, and I think it's a good idea, of a storyline, which will be surprising and different, and it won't just be an easy cash-in. It'll actually be the same guys, the same characters, 20 years later. I shouldn't put a time limit on that, 'cause it's not about that, it's about when they feel like they're different people, and they are aging. It's about these hedonists who abused themselves, their bodies, their minds, and everybody around them, at that time of your life when you feel like you can do anything, you're invulnerable. They hit the wall in middle age, when everything stops, and you think, "I can't do that anymore, I will not be able to get away with that anymore." We always thought that's a wonderful idea as a sequel, rather than just a cash-in of doing the same thing again, I just thought that would be very exciting. So that's the plan. The problem is, they don't look any different at the moment from whenTrainspotting was made, to be absolutely honest. They look exactly the same. They're a little heavier, but they basically look the same. Actors stay suspended in that timeless moment where they're moisturizing and looking after themselves and making sure they keep fit and healthy, because it's their work, it's their future employment. But when time ravages them, we will be waiting for them. That's what we always say.

AVC: Do you keep up with them, or talk to them about your plans? DB: No, not really. It's not like friendship or anything, but the guys all recently came back together again to do DVD interviews. They're planning a new release of the film on DVD, so they all did roundtable interviews and stuff like that. That proves to me that they are prepared to get involved again, so we'll see.

AVC: What's your next project?

DB: Well, I was going to do an animated film next. Because again, I do believe what I'm saying, I'm not just saying it to you, that you should go back to the beginning again, do something you're not familiar with. I was working with Frank Cottrell Boyce, who wrote Millions. We were working on the script at DreamWorks together, 'cause animated films take forever. I normally only ever do one thing at a time, I normally never double up on what I do, but I was doing that on this one. It's fallen apart, unfortunately, so it's not going to happen. [Animated films are] so expensive and complicated. They're a huge thing. So nothing. I really do genuinely do one thing at a time. It's not the cleverest way in some ways. Your agent says you should have other stuff in your back pocket, but I don't really work like that. I tend to be very obsessive and instinctive and compulsive. Once I go for something, I just go for it 100 miles an hour. And I expect everybody else to behave like that. It surprises writers, but it sometimes helps get better work out of them. Writers are often waiting to be selected from an array of projects that the studio, the director, the star is considering. Whereas with me, it's just, "Let's go! Let's do it now, that's the assignment! Let's go!" And I can see that look on his face, he's thinking, "He doesn't really mean that. We'll go there, we'll mess about, it'll be a year." But no, I mean it. When I say go, we go, and that energy is the single most important ingredient in a film.

People talk about being an auteur and all these kinds of things. [Whispering.] I'm not an auteur, because I work with screenwriters, I use their scripts, I follow them very accurately. People say, "Yes, but the instinct is that youchoose…" I answer that by saying, "What you're talking about is not important. What's most important on a film is the spirit, in the idea, in the script, in the way it's made." The spirit is the most important single thing, because that conveys more than anything. It's the only thing that will ever allow low-budget films to burst out of the natural economics that confine them, because that allows your money to go a lot further. You persuade the crew with your spirit to work harder for you, so your film no longer looks like a $10 million film, it looks like a $100 million film. And that's what you're trying to do with everything: to make these journeys that are extraordinary to people. That's conveyed to the audience, I think. That's my belief, anyway.


Copied from http://www.avclub.com/content/interview/danny_boyle.

REVIEW: Slumdog Millionaire

Tuesday, December 30, 2008 at 12:18 am
I'll keep this simple: Cancel whatever you're doing tonight and go see "Slumdog Millionaire" instead. Yes, you, the girl obsessed with "Twilight" and the guy still hung up on "The Dark Knight." Take the grandparents, too, and the teenagers. Everyone can play.

You've never heard of the actors. A third of the film is in Hindi. Much of it takes place in the most fetid, poverty-ridden corners of the Indian subcontinent, and most of it isn't nice. Yet this sprawling, madly romantic fairy-tale epic is the kind of deep-dish audience-rouser we've long given up hoping for from Hollywood. "Slumdog" is a soaring return to form for director Danny Boyle ("Trainspotting"), but mostly it's just a miracle of mainstream pop moviemaking - the sort of thing modern filmmakers aren't supposed to make anymore. Except they just did.

- Ty Burr, Boston Review

MovieWeb - Movie Photos, Videos & More


Will this be out in Malaysia?

MovieWeb - Movie Photos, Videos & More


Young British Asian actor Dev Patel is a real find. He's only 18. And already a Golden Globe nomination.

MovieWeb - Movie Photos, Videos & More


Why is this movie so good? It's not a well-known film yet. It's just started its run in selected cinemas in the States - but at the moment it is the unofficial frontrunner for Best Picture at the Oscars this coming February. I guess it is its unflinching and gutwrenching portrayal of personal hardship of a very likable protagonist in the slums of Mumbai, coupled with an ultimately optimistic and sincere story that is insistently and energetically directed by Danny Boyle (The Beach, Trainspotting, 28 Days Later, Sunshine), in yet another surprising genre-switching move.

How Good I Think The Film Is: 9.5/10
How Much I Liked It: 8.5/10
Oscar Noms That It Deserves: Best Picture, Best Directing - Danny Boyle, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Cinematography, Best Film Editing, Best Original Score - AR Rahman, Best Original Song - O Saya


YOUTUBE

Trailer


Danny Boyle on India


Danny Boyle on Dev Patel


Danny Boyle on Directing Kids


Interview with Dev Patel and Frieda Pinto


Behind the Scenes with Dev Patel

REVIEW: 海角七號 | Cape No. 7

Friday, December 26, 2008 at 6:34 pm

An Australian-Taiwanese cinematographer friend who's still in the States at the moment alerted me to this film a few months back, this being the highest-grossing movie in Taiwan. It was playing at the Pusan International Film Festival this year (which, as some of you know, I went for), but unfortunately, as interested as I am to catch the film, there were just too many other films I wanted to watch and I was not able to squeeze this in. Also, I was gambling on this film arriving at Malaysian shores, if it is indeed so popular in Taiwan - and sure enough, the gamble paid off and the film opened on Christmas Day.

Now, if you've read at all about this film, you would read that it was the Taiwanese young who embraced the film like mad (Titanic-style, so it was fitting that the film contained scenes of a steamer ship - albeit a very terrible CGI version of it), much to the bewilderment of the director Wei Te-Sheng, and much to the chagrin of the critics who almost unanimously downgraded the film as a pile of technically-unaccomplished shlock.

I happen to agree with the critics. But at the same time, I had a strong feeling the Malaysian Chinese audience I was with would've disagreed with me. (For example, "今天去戲院看完《海角七號》、從進場、到出戲院內心一直都是處於亢奮的階段…
這部片他他他媽的太好看了啦~~~~~!!")


You see, the production values of the film was sloppy. There's crossing of the imaginary line (even the worst American films don't commit this mistake), poor editing skills (a couple of the sequences think they're montages ... but they're not and so they're disjointed instead), no footstep effects (even for quiet interior moments), frequent usage of un-smooth slow-motion, a few out-of-focussed shots, etc.

You may argue that all these are not important, and what's important is the story, and the story is why the Taiwanese youths kept going back for their fix. Excuse me, it was mightily distracting, and I'd wager that on a subconscious level, even the average audience feels how disjointed the film feels. On the other hand, the results speak for itself - but I suspect mainstream producers who try to study why this film hit such a chord in Taiwan and attempt to reproduce it in another project will find nothing to learn.

The story is rather unconventional. We are introduced to a whole village of characters - the angsty young man whose unidentified past failure prevents him from living fully; a Mandarin-speaking Japanese graduate staying back in Taiwan who is handed a most difficult project; a young disaffected girl with a penchant for modern songs and piano and doesn't talk much; her depressed mother who smokes a lot and works at the hotel; the hotel manager who is planning a concert for a Japanese band; another young man who stumbles all around town trying to sell a new liquor product; the hotel receptionist exasperated at him; the town mayor's representative who also happens to be the first young man's guardian; his wife; a woman whose husband owns the local mechanic and has three unruly kids; the mechanic working for them who is secretly in love with the boss's wife; the old man who gives the first young man a job ferrying letters and whose one talent is playing the yue-qin; two traffic police officers. Had enough?

Actually, that's the one thing I admired about the film - that it dared to present enough characters to fill two typical American films.


Storywise, there's a main plot involving the formation of a most unusual band (whose reason for genesis is most contrived now that I think of it) and a small secondary plot involving love letters from a Japanese teacher who left Taiwan half a century ago to his sweetheart whom he left behind. Of course, there are any number of subplots involving any combination of the multitude of characters.

So it is perhaps unfortunate that I was left bored with what's happening throughout the first two-thirds of the film, given the potentially 60 different interesting things that could happen in the film. A number of the scenes were slower than they needed to be; as usual, there were quite a few moments when the film telegraphed what's about to happen and then try to stretch out the moment before we actually see it happen. Dude, that only works if what happens is not unoriginal, or if what happens is completely different from what we expected. The protagonist is sort of nice to look at and the Japanese girl is ... well, Japanese, and that should satisfy the easily-satisfied male audience.

Towards the end the film got a bit better, because the song the band sings is actually quite engaging, and a little bit of the romance chemistry comes through - thanks to a suddenly-inspired cinematography choice for the crucial scene. Something else that works are a few of the film's attempts at comedy - Wei really should write a comedy next as he definitely has the knack for it.


In the end, I'd like to evoke the sage words of Hollywood screenwriter William Goldman: when it comes to the movie business, "nobody knows anything". Wei Te-Sheng was invited to bring his film to Los Angeles Film School some weeks ago. I would've like to hear what he has to say - very odd for filmmakers to bring their films to LAFS.

How Good I Think The Film Is: 6.5/10
How Much I Liked The Film: 4.5/10

The Mystery Of The Hidden Prodigies

Thursday, December 25, 2008 at 2:47 pm
Here is a list of really amazing people.

CONDUCTOR ARTURO TOSCANNI
Knew by heart every note of every instrument for 250 symphonic works, plus the works and music to 100 operas. At one concert, a bassoonist noticed a key on his instrument wasn’t working. Toscanni said, “That’s OK, that note will not occur in tonight’s concert.”

HIDEAKI TOMOYORI
Recited from memory the mathematical value of pi to 40,000 decimal places.

ANTONIO MAGLIABECHI
Italian, born in 1633, used his incredible photographic memory and mastery of speed-reading to demonstrate how he could write out the entire contents of a 368-page book after reading it once.

DARIO DONATELLI
Accurately recalled a series of 73 numbers within 48 seconds of first hearing them.

CHIEF KAUMATANA
A Maori Chief of New Zealand could recite from memory the entire history of his tribe, spanning 45 generations and 1,000 years. Each recitation took 3 days.

STEPHEN POWELSON
Memorized more than 14,300 lines of Homer’s 15,693 line Iliad in Classic Greek. It took 10 years of work. He started when he was 60 years old.

GOU YAN LING
A telephone operator memorized more than 15,000 telephone numbers in Harbin, China.

CARDINAL MEZZOFANI
Spoke more than 60 languages. Fluently.

CHRISTIAN FREDERICH HERNAKER
Born in 1721, by the age of 10 months could repeat every word spoken to him. By age 3 he could speak Latin and French and had a comprehensive knowledge of the Bible, geography and world history. He died at the age of 4, after he predicted his own death.

REV. DAVID MISENHEIMER
Of Charlotte, NC. Each Sunday, welcomes all 1800+ worshippers by name as they enter the church.

KIM PEEK
Has memorized over 9,000 books. He can read a page in 8-10 seconds. He read “Hunt For Red October” in 1 hour and 25 minutes. Four months later, when asked, he gave the name of the radio operator described in the book referring the page number and quoted the passages describing the character.



Here's the really curious thing - there is barely any information about these people. Try Googling these names - chances are, this webpage will be listed among the results. Why, if they are indeed so amazing, are they not more well known? (Notwithstanding the fact that many of these people existed centuries ago.) Particularly interesting is the case of Christian Hernaker (Google results: only 8 links), who would be the smartest person who ever existed if he had lived - but why did he die at the age of 4?

Are you not curious to find out more? Any thoughts?

On Yes Man, and Juno

Tuesday, December 23, 2008 at 12:23 am
I had the script to Yes Man from my time in LA a year ago, but I kept it and never read it as I prefer to see the film first before reading the script to compare.

It's interesting to see what they kept and what was taken out or added, and I can see that on the whole there was an improvement on the script - not to mention stuff written just to fit Jim Carrey more. Okay, so I wished they had included the Nigerian scam letter stuff from the original script - but I like how they took the Persianwifefinder.com joke and ran along with it more in the final film. Also, the scene at the bridal stationery store is much improved in the final film (and much expanded as well, to the audience's delight) - and even better, it's tied up to Carl's effort to learn Korean. Set up, then pay off - that stuff works. Oh, and if you think Carl in the final film had it bad with the old lady, you have no idea what he had to do in the script. [Not telling.] And certainly the romantic relationship in the final film is a lot more elaborate than in the script.

On another note - Juno. Why the heck is this suddenly playing on TGV, Cathay and MBO here, more than a year after its US release and when most people have forgotten that it was nominated for Oscars? I thought it was released earlier in 2008?

I really need to understand how Malaysian distributors and exhibitors think. It is imperative that I do.

REVIEW: Australia

Saturday, December 20, 2008 at 12:52 am
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Two perspectives. First, Baz Luhrmann, who clearly spent a lot of effort and time to make this film - the first since Moulin Rouge! 7 years ago. Baz is such a meticulous director that he is clearly not ready to release this film. Unconscientious audiences will chuckle at the lousy composite work of the horse riders against the backdrop and landscapes - and there are MANY. It seemed like they focussed completion on visual effects work on the most important and stunning spectacle - the bombing of Darwin, an awesome sight to behold. However, the film is so obviously designed to be all at once commercial, film festival-worthy and Oscar-bait, that the filmmakers didn't really have a choice other than to release the film now.

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Then, the point of view of the audience. Or more specifically, my friend's, who saw the film with me. He didn't like it. He thought the story contrived. ("Not much story," he said, even though there are a good 3 hours of it and Malaysian audiences, as typical, got whiny when film plots stretch out over the usual 3 acts.) I suspect that is due to Baz's style of filmmaking utilised on a more conventional film (giving it a very weird quality which I never did get used to, namely weird camera angles for dialogue scenes that's oddly cut together, sudden ellipses at certain points of the story, contrivances in order to drive the plot to where Baz wants it the way drovers drove cattle, excessive melodrama accompanied by grand music that sometimes leaves the audience behind, etc).

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My friend was so dismissive of the film that I thought it interesting to bring those two perspectives together and look at it - a film that was so lovingly and expensively made (though perhaps burdened by other requirements, such as to make Australia the next tourism haven - and steal it from those damn Kiwis and their blasted LOTR legacy - and to address the unsavoury issue of racism) is summarily waved aside by an annoyed audience who didn't enjoy the film. That shows the perverse stakes in the business of motion pictures.

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Australia will not do well. It will probably do okay, but a lot of audiences are going to be disappointed by the disjointed editing - and surprisingly, from as skilled an editor as Dody Dorn. But, as I said, it's partly because of the choices of cinematography. The cinematography IS awesome, however, when showing the landscapes of the Northern Territories in all its glory. As for the story itself, well, truth be told I didn't ask too much of it. I would rather point out, for example, the part that worked surprisingly well - Nicole Kidman's character Lady Ashley's maternal relationship with the young half-caste boy Nullah. Their scenes together were the nearest the film got to tear-inducement.

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I did find the Aborigine old wizard King George rather annoying though. The fellow's just ... there.

The ending is one of the most speculated about point of the film, with people who saw the film insisting that the ending was changed last minute, while Baz defends it by saying that it is just one of his 6 endings and yes it was different from the one at the test screening but so what? At any case, that supposed twist was not why the ending didn't work - the entire ending just wasn't emotional enough.

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I hate to say this, and it's not an easy film for me to rate. On the one hand I like that Baz worked hard for this one, and for the most part the film is gorgeous and elegant. It is Hollywood, you know? It is his Gone With The Wind. With the gloss, the glow on the characters' unblemished faces, the saturated images, the way they looked sexy even when covered with dirt, characters who are all noble or entirely villainous, etc. In a world of movies which has gone the way of the modern age, when audiences demand more realism, more Bourne and less old Bond, these sort of movies are rare now.

The bit about the kangaroo was priceless though. The entire first act is almost just one big joke about the character of the Australians - thoughtless cavalier. They're really proud of that.

How Good I Think The Film Is: 6/10
How Much I Liked It: 7/10
Oscar Noms That It Deserves: None

Top 10 Movies of 2008 [Tentative]

Wednesday, December 17, 2008 at 9:45 am
Roughly ordered according to my preferences. The following does not contain 10 films, but the proper list won't be out until next year March at least as I HAVE to get my hands on the Oscar films first.


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The Chronicles Of Narnia: Prince Caspian
I thought long and hard and thus far I still think this is my favourite film of the year - which will drag my reputation down among a lot of people who did not think much of this film. I like it because the siblings have matured, the sense of continuation into a sequel story is brilliantly handled by director Andrew Adamson, and it is on the whole more emotionally matured. It's not without its flaws, but it left a deep impression on me.



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Hancock
Most people dislike the film (mostly because of the mid-film twist that pushed the plot into a different genre), or didn't think too much about it. I love it because of its charm, and because of the music, which sets a completely new mood not found in any previous film I've come across - one that is sincere in its comedy and yet seriously heroic when it needs to be. It is also a most unusual romance story. And ultimately, it is magic realism - my favourite genre.



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The Dark Knight
This decade's Titanic. So why isn't it the top film, you ask? As much as I love the darkness which is not overdone, the intellectual severity with which it pursues its themes, and the themes which are more sophisticated than even some Oscar films, I found that repeated watching diminished the enjoyment of the film - which isn't true for the aforementioned films. I will not doubt its #4 position on IMDb's Top 250 - however I will always begrudge the fact that they did the unpredictably demented villain and stomach bomb gimmick first before I did.



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Wall•E
Glorious Wall•E! I had low hopes for this one when they announced it over a year ago. The first teaser just seemed like Pixar tooting its horn to me (so what if it's the last of the first set of ideas the Pixar brainstormed over a decade ago?), and why should I care about a Johnny No. 5 reprise? Besides, Ratatouille was such a resounding success that I didn't think Pixar could (or indeed, needed to) do better. Then I saw the film, and the perfect balance of childlike wonder and thought-provoking themes (and don't forget comedy) easily places this among Pixar's best.



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The Children Of Huang Shi
A much neglected film, I was surprised the film didn't do more business. The actors put up an un-show-offy performance in a very interesting and surprisingly heartwarming film about an Englishman's travails in wartime China. Also, I can't get the music out of my mind - from David Hirschfelder, who is now seen as the composer of Baz Luhrmann's Australia. It is by no means an innovative or impressive film, but when it comes down to it emotions matter to me a lot and this the film achieves.



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Cloverfield
Perhaps the most innovative Hollywood film of the year, Cloverfield takes the only-to-be-used-once Blair Witch Project concept and applies it to a Godzilla movie, and despite its narrative flaws (spending an unnecessary amount of time on the Rob-Beth story) it is competently produced, milking the juice out of its high-conceptness.




Special Mention
Sell Out!
Special mention, because it will not be formally released in Malaysia until early 2009. Malaysians, behold! This is, to me, the best Malaysian film in the post-P. Ramlee era. I say this with a certain amount of bias - I'm not a huge fan of the Malaysian indie films (though I certainly would not denigrate their efforts). But what this satirical comedy film is, is a more sophisticated film than any other Malaysian film that has graced our cinemas - it's not pretentious, the jokes are sharp and intelligent, the performances are not terrible, it does not dumb down nor insult the audience, nor does it pretend to be smart with too much allegorical or metaphorical hogwash (as it, it's not trying too hard to mean something). In short, it is ENTERTAINING.

Malaysians, DO NOT MISS OUT when it comes out next year. (I'm told it'll be February or March. For now, just keep an eye out.)



And here are some films (all potential Oscar films) which I have not seen yet which may well end up on the list and push some of the above films off.


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Changeling
While most film buffs are more enamoured by Ol' Clint's Gran Torino, I for one am more interested in this film, which stars Angelina Jolie in yet another powerhouse performance of a woman who goes against the LAPD during the 20s when they botched up the investigation of the kidnapping of her son. It looks like the sort of intense drama, once again built around the impressive portrayal of a bereaved woman by Angelina Jolie, who previously did something similar in A Mighty Heart (for which she should've been nominated for).



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The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
Based on a short story by American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald, this elegantly made film by David Fincher (Fight Club, Se7en, Panic Room) reunites Brad Pitt with Cate Blanchett as well as Tilda Swinton in a fable-like, heartfelt story about a man who ages backwards. Again, magic realism gets me - and here you get unusual instances such as Benjamin and his soulmate arriving at their same age during their 40s. There's a slight Burton-esque quality to the cinematography and production design which I didn't expect from Fincher. And word is Taraji Henson may garner a Supporting Actress nomination.



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Doubt
Based on a play - and based on that fact you will either like it or you don't. Well, I love plays. Here, multiple Oscar-winner Meryl Streep gets yet another Oscar buzz hovering around that she must be thoroughly embarrassed by now, playing a psychopathically-stern mother superior who charges a priest, played by Oscar-winner Philip Seymour Hoffman, of paedophilia, seen through the eyes of a young nun, played by Oscar-nominated Amy Adams, and flanked by a soon-to-be Oscar-nominated performance by Viola Davis (whom I have been waiting to break out since her small role in World Trade Center which nevertheless broke my heart so deeply thanks to her sincere performance). Yes, it has Oscar written all over it. Oh, and the dialogue must be fun too.



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Frost/Nixon
One of my most anticipated films of the year - because it's a Ron Howard film, and because I actually SAW Ron Howard directing this across the street from my school. Howard (Apollo 13, A Beautiful Mind, The Da Vinci Code, Ransom, Cinderella Man) again works his magic - in a film where you already know the outcome (hint: Nixon loses), he manages to make the stakes matter to the audience, and this in a film based on a play by Oscar nominee Peter Morgan (The Queen) consisting almost entirely of a series of interviews between British TV show host David Frost and disgraced US President Nixon - in the 70s. It couldn't be more boring as a synopsis - but word is that the film is 'surprisingly entertaining'.

FROST: Do you really believe that the President can do something illegal-
NIXON: I am saying, that if the President does it, then it is not illegal!
FROST: (stunned silence) ... I'm sorry?



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Milk
Not exactly a fan of Gus Van Sant. But here's what you get. A film about the first openly gay mayor in the US, set in San Francisco. Sean Penn in a performance that critics say guarantees him an Oscar nomination (and so far, the most likely to win ... almost unfair since he just won for Mystic River not too long ago). James Franco playing his lover - and they kiss and have sex in the film. An assassination story. By all accounts, it was an accomplished film.



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The Reader
Kate Winslet doing Kim Basinger (from The Door In The Floor) in the first of her soon-to-be Oscar-nominated roles. Story of a German teenager (newcomer David Kross) who gets tangled up in a sexual relationship with a beautiful but troubled train conductor (Winslet) who asks him to read to her before their sessions. She disappears, only to reappear in his life again when during university he learns that she is on trial for assisting in genocide in wartime Germany. David Kross was not yet 18 (age of consent) when they began filming, so production was shut down for a few months - so that they can legally film his sex scenes with Winslet after his birthday. If you're not jealous, I am. The presence of Ralph Fiennes and Lena Olin is a bonus.



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Revolutionary Road
Two things. This is the second role in which Winslet will likely garner an Oscar nomination this year. And more famously, the film reunites Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet, again in roles which are perfect for them, at this stage of their career, and also having been more matured in reality. However, if the fact that Jack and Rose are in the same film again is the reason you're seeing the film, then you're in for a shock. (Though cheekily, the poster for the film mirrors that of Titanic!) Director Sam Mendes (American Beauty) treads old ground by revisiting the theme of dysfunctional suburbia, but this time in a relationship between a young couple in the 50s. It is far from a comedy however, and there's something a totally disturbing climax that awaits at the end of the film.



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Slumdog Millionaire
The most likely film to join the Top 10, almost automatically. Again, before I thought it was an odd project for director Danny Boyle (Sunshine, Trainspotting, 28 Days Later), whom I met briefly in LA last year when he was still prepping for this. We know he hops genres - but a film set in Mumbai? Then the film got into Telluride Film Festival, which means it is serious and interesting - Oscar-worthy. Then I saw the trailer. It uses Sigur Ros' Hoppipolla. And people talked about the cinematography. And the story. And AR Rahman's score. And newcomer Dev Patel. And it won awards and critical mentions left, right and center. And such an unusual story - involving the Indian version of Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?, the slums of Mumbai, the difficult but joyous tale of a young boy who grows up, an interrupted love story, disturbing scenes of interrogation. It promises to be a frantic mix of all those elements, combining to make a relentlessly engaging film.


And now I hope you guys are saying: WHY ARE THESE FILMS NOT APPEARING IN MALAYSIAN CINEMAS? (Or, why are their release dates delayed by so many months?)

The Organisational Principles Of The Mind

Saturday, December 13, 2008 at 12:57 pm

Actually, the disadvantages of how the mind usually works - and why lateral thinking is important. (Taken from Lateral Thinking, by Edward de Bono.)

1. The patterns tend to become established ever more rigidly since they control attention.

2. It is extremely difficult to change patterns once they have become established.

3. Information that is arranged as part of one pattern cannot be easily used as part of a completely different pattern.

4. There is a tendency towards 'centering' which means that anything which has any resemblance to a standard pattern will be perceived as the standard pattern.

5. Patterns can be created by divisions which are more or less arbitrary. What is continuous may be divided into distinct units which then grow further apart. Once such units are formed they becomes self-perpetuating. The division may continue long after it has ceased to be useful or the division may intrude into areas where it has no usefulness.

6. There is great continuity in the system. A slight divergence at one point can make a huge difference later.

7. The sequence of arrival of information plays too important a part in its arrangement. Any arrangement of information is thus unlikely to be the best possible arrangement of the information that is available.

8. There is a tendency to snap from one pattern to another instead of having a smooth change over.

9. Even though the choice between two competing patterns may be very fine one of them will be chosen and the other one completely ignored.

10. There is a marked tendency to 'polarise'. This means moving to either extreme instead of maintaining some balanced point between them.

11. Established patterns get larger and larger. That is to say individual patterns are strung together to give a longer and longer sequence which is so dominant that it constitutes a pattern on its own. There is nothing in the systems which tends to break up such long sequences.

12. The mind is a cliché making and cliché using system.

The purpose of lateral thinking is to overcome these limitations, by providing a means for restructuring, for escaping from cliché patterns, for putting information together in new ways to give new ideas.

In order to do this, lateral thinking makes use of the properties of this type of system. For instance, the use of random stimulation could only work in a self-maximising system. Also disruption and provocation are only of use if the information is then snapped together again to give a new pattern.

Despair, Inc.

at 1:36 am































































Images taken from www.despair.com.

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